Basic Math

Rational and irrational numbers | Eighth Grade

Rational and Irrational Numbers - Grade 8 Mathematics

Comprehensive Short Notes & Formulae

1. Understanding Rational Numbers

Definition:

Rational Number: A number that can be expressed as a fraction \(\frac{p}{q}\) where \(p\) and \(q\) are integers and \(q \neq 0\)

Formula: \(\text{Rational Number} = \frac{p}{q}\) where \(p, q \in \mathbb{Z}\) and \(q \neq 0\)

Characteristics:

✓ Can be expressed as a fraction of two integers

✓ Decimal form either terminates or repeats

✓ Includes all integers, fractions, and finite/repeating decimals

Examples:

Integers: \(5 = \frac{5}{1}\), \(-3 = \frac{-3}{1}\), \(0 = \frac{0}{1}\)

Fractions: \(\frac{3}{4}\), \(\frac{-7}{2}\), \(\frac{22}{7}\)

Terminating Decimals: \(0.5 = \frac{1}{2}\), \(0.75 = \frac{3}{4}\), \(2.8 = \frac{14}{5}\)

Repeating Decimals: \(0.\overline{3} = \frac{1}{3}\), \(0.\overline{6} = \frac{2}{3}\), \(1.\overline{25} = \frac{41}{33}\)

2. Understanding Irrational Numbers

Definition:

Irrational Number: A number that CANNOT be expressed as a fraction \(\frac{p}{q}\) where \(p\) and \(q\) are integers

Cannot be written as a ratio of two integers

Characteristics:

✓ Cannot be expressed as a fraction of integers

✓ Decimal form is non-terminating and non-repeating

✓ Includes most square roots, π, e, and golden ratio

Examples:

Square Roots: \(\sqrt{2} \approx 1.414213...\), \(\sqrt{3} \approx 1.732050...\), \(\sqrt{5}\)

Pi: \(\pi \approx 3.141592653...\) (never ends, never repeats)

Euler's Number: \(e \approx 2.718281828...\)

Golden Ratio: \(\phi \approx 1.618033988...\)

Non-repeating Decimals: \(0.10110111011110...\)

3. Identify Rational and Irrational Square Roots

Rule for Square Roots:

Rational: \(\sqrt{n}\) is rational if \(n\) is a perfect square

Irrational: \(\sqrt{n}\) is irrational if \(n\) is NOT a perfect square

Rational Square Roots (Perfect Squares):

\(\sqrt{1} = 1\) ✓

\(\sqrt{4} = 2\) ✓

\(\sqrt{9} = 3\) ✓

\(\sqrt{16} = 4\) ✓

\(\sqrt{25} = 5\) ✓

\(\sqrt{36} = 6\) ✓

\(\sqrt{49} = 7\) ✓

\(\sqrt{64} = 8\) ✓

\(\sqrt{81} = 9\) ✓

\(\sqrt{100} = 10\) ✓

\(\sqrt{121} = 11\) ✓

\(\sqrt{144} = 12\) ✓

Irrational Square Roots (Non-Perfect Squares):

\(\sqrt{2}\) ✗

\(\sqrt{3}\) ✗

\(\sqrt{5}\) ✗

\(\sqrt{6}\) ✗

\(\sqrt{7}\) ✗

\(\sqrt{8}\) ✗

\(\sqrt{10}\) ✗

\(\sqrt{11}\) ✗

\(\sqrt{12}\) ✗

\(\sqrt{13}\) ✗

\(\sqrt{15}\) ✗

\(\sqrt{20}\) ✗

4. Classification of Numbers - The Number System

Hierarchy of Number Sets:

Real Numbers (ℝ) = Rational Numbers (ℚ) + Irrational Numbers

Number Set Definitions:

1. Natural Numbers (ℕ): \(\{1, 2, 3, 4, 5, ...\}\)

Counting numbers starting from 1

2. Whole Numbers (W): \(\{0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, ...\}\)

Natural numbers + zero

3. Integers (ℤ): \(\{..., -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, ...\}\)

Whole numbers + negative numbers

4. Rational Numbers (ℚ): \(\frac{p}{q}\) where \(p, q \in \mathbb{Z}, q \neq 0\)

Includes all integers, fractions, terminating/repeating decimals

5. Irrational Numbers: Cannot be expressed as \(\frac{p}{q}\)

Non-terminating, non-repeating decimals

6. Real Numbers (ℝ): Rational + Irrational Numbers

All numbers on the number line

Classification Examples:

7: Natural, Whole, Integer, Rational, Real

0: Whole, Integer, Rational, Real

-5: Integer, Rational, Real

\(\frac{3}{4}\): Rational, Real

\(\sqrt{2}\): Irrational, Real

\(\pi\): Irrational, Real

5. How to Identify: Rational or Irrational?

Decision Flowchart:

Step 1: Can it be written as \(\frac{p}{q}\) where \(p, q\) are integers and \(q \neq 0\)?

→ YES = Rational | NO = Continue to Step 2

Step 2: Is it a decimal?

→ Terminating (ends) = Rational

→ Repeating (pattern repeats) = Rational

→ Non-terminating, non-repeating = Irrational

Step 3: Is it a square root?

→ Perfect square = Rational

→ Not a perfect square = Irrational

Quick Test Examples:

0.75 → Terminates → RATIONAL

0.333... → Repeats → RATIONAL

\(\sqrt{16}\) → Perfect square (4) → RATIONAL

0.101001000... → No pattern → IRRATIONAL

\(\sqrt{7}\) → Not perfect square → IRRATIONAL

\(\pi\) → Never ends/repeats → IRRATIONAL

6. Locating Irrational Numbers on Number Lines

Method:

Step 1: Find two consecutive perfect squares that the number lies between

Step 2: Approximate the decimal value

Step 3: Plot the approximate location on the number line

Example - Locating \(\sqrt{7}\):

Step 1: \(4 < 7 < 9\) → \(\sqrt{4} < \sqrt{7} < \sqrt{9}\) → \(2 < \sqrt{7} < 3\)

Step 2: \(\sqrt{7} \approx 2.646\)

Step 3: Plot between 2 and 3, closer to 3 (about 65% of the way)

More Examples:

\(\sqrt{2} \approx 1.414\) → Between 1 and 2

\(\sqrt{10} \approx 3.162\) → Between 3 and 4

\(\pi \approx 3.14159\) → Between 3 and 4

\(\sqrt{50} \approx 7.071\) → Between 7 and 8

7. Compare and Order Rational and Irrational Numbers

Comparison Strategy:

Step 1: Convert all numbers to decimal form

Step 2: Approximate irrational numbers to same decimal places

Step 3: Compare decimals digit by digit from left to right

Step 4: Order from least to greatest or greatest to least

Comparison Rules:

For Square Roots: \(\sqrt{a} < \sqrt{b}\) if \(a < b\)

Example: \(\sqrt{5} < \sqrt{10}\) because \(5 < 10\)

Mixed Numbers: Convert to decimals for comparison

Use 3-4 decimal places for accuracy

Example - Order from Least to Greatest:

Given: \(\sqrt{10}\), \(\pi\), \(3.14\), \(\frac{22}{7}\)

Step 1 - Convert to Decimals:

• \(\sqrt{10} \approx 3.162\)

• \(\pi \approx 3.142\)

• \(3.14 = 3.140\)

• \(\frac{22}{7} \approx 3.143\)

Answer (Least to Greatest): \(3.14 < \pi < \frac{22}{7} < \sqrt{10}\)

Another Example:

Order: \(\sqrt{5}\), \(2.3\), \(\frac{9}{4}\), \(\sqrt{7}\)

Conversions: \(\sqrt{5} \approx 2.236\), \(\frac{9}{4} = 2.25\), \(\sqrt{7} \approx 2.646\)

Result: \(\sqrt{5} < \frac{9}{4} < 2.3 < \sqrt{7}\)

8. Approximate Irrational Numbers

Approximation Techniques:

Method 1: Using Perfect Squares (for square roots)

Find two perfect squares that bracket the number

Example: For \(\sqrt{20}\) → \(16 < 20 < 25\) → \(4 < \sqrt{20} < 5\)

Method 2: Using a Calculator

Use calculator for precise decimal approximation

Method 3: Memorize Common Values

\(\pi \approx 3.14159\), \(e \approx 2.71828\), \(\sqrt{2} \approx 1.414\)

Common Approximations to Memorize:

\(\sqrt{2} \approx 1.414\)

\(\sqrt{3} \approx 1.732\)

\(\sqrt{5} \approx 2.236\)

\(\sqrt{6} \approx 2.449\)

\(\sqrt{7} \approx 2.646\)

\(\sqrt{8} \approx 2.828\)

\(\sqrt{10} \approx 3.162\)

\(\pi \approx 3.14159\)

9. Rational vs Irrational Numbers - Summary Table

FeatureRational NumbersIrrational Numbers
DefinitionCan be written as \(\frac{p}{q}\)Cannot be written as \(\frac{p}{q}\)
Decimal FormTerminating or RepeatingNon-terminating, Non-repeating
Examples5, -3, \(\frac{2}{3}\), 0.75, 0.333...\(\sqrt{2}\), \(\pi\), \(e\), \(\sqrt{3}\)
Square RootsPerfect squares onlyNon-perfect squares
Can be GraphedYes, on number lineYes, on number line
IncludesAll integers, fractionsMost roots, π, e

10. Properties of Operations

Addition and Subtraction:

✓ Rational + Rational = Rational

✓ Rational + Irrational = Irrational

✓ Irrational + Irrational = Could be Either

Example: \(\sqrt{2} + (-\sqrt{2}) = 0\) (rational)

Example: \(\sqrt{2} + \sqrt{3}\) (irrational)

Multiplication and Division:

✓ Rational × Rational = Rational

✓ Rational (≠ 0) × Irrational = Irrational

✓ Irrational × Irrational = Could be Either

Example: \(\sqrt{2} \times \sqrt{2} = 2\) (rational)

Example: \(\sqrt{2} \times \sqrt{3} = \sqrt{6}\) (irrational)

Quick Reference Card

Rational Numbers

• Form: \(\frac{p}{q}\), \(q \neq 0\)

• Decimals: Terminate or repeat

• Examples: 5, -3, \(\frac{2}{3}\), 0.5

• Roots: Perfect squares only

Irrational Numbers

• Cannot be written as \(\frac{p}{q}\)

• Decimals: Never end, never repeat

• Examples: \(\sqrt{2}\), \(\pi\), \(e\)

• Roots: Non-perfect squares

Real Numbers Hierarchy

Natural ⊂ Whole ⊂ Integers ⊂ Rational ⊂ Real

Irrational ⊂ Real (but NOT in Rational)

⚡ Quick Check: Decimals terminate/repeat = Rational | Decimals never end & never repeat = Irrational ⚡

Practice Tips & Study Strategy

Memorize perfect squares 1-15: Helps identify rational square roots quickly

Check decimal patterns: Look for terminating or repeating patterns

Practice approximation: Learn to estimate irrational numbers between integers

Use a calculator: Verify decimal expansions and approximations

Remember special numbers: π ≈ 3.14159, e ≈ 2.71828, √2 ≈ 1.414

Work backwards: Square a potential answer to verify square roots

Draw number lines: Visual representation helps with ordering

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake 1: Thinking all decimals are irrational

Correct: Terminating and repeating decimals are rational

Mistake 2: Assuming \(\sqrt{2}\) can be simplified to a fraction

Correct: \(\sqrt{2}\) is irrational and cannot be expressed as \(\frac{p}{q}\)

Mistake 3: Confusing π with \(\frac{22}{7}\)

Correct: \(\frac{22}{7}\) is just an approximation; π is irrational

Mistake 4: Forgetting that integers are rational

Correct: All integers can be written as \(\frac{n}{1}\), so they're rational

Mistake 5: Assuming irrational + irrational is always irrational

Correct: \(\sqrt{2} + (-\sqrt{2}) = 0\), which is rational

📚 Grade 8 Mathematics - Rational & Irrational Numbers Complete Reference 📚

Master the real number system to excel in algebra and beyond!

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